412 
PROPOSED BYE-LAWS 0E THE PHARMACEUTICAL SOCIETY. 
Charter 
line 197. 
Act, sec. 
viii. 
Act, sec. 
viii.; 
Charter, 
line 231. 
the Charter or by the Statute, 1852, and the persons so 
appointed shall constitute and be called the Board of Ex¬ 
aminers for England and Wales. 
3. The Council shall, at the first monthly meeting of the 
Council after the general meeting in 1869, and in every 
subsequent year, appoint fit and proper persons in Scot¬ 
land to be examiners, and to meet in Edinburgh or Glas¬ 
gow, or such other place or places as the Council may 
think desirable, and to conduct there all such examinations 
as are provided for or contemplated by the Statute, 1852, 
and the persons so appointed shall constitute and be called 
the Board of Examiners for Scotland. 
4. The President and Vice-President of the Society shall, 
ex officio, be members of the Boards of Examiners, and 
shall preside at all meetings of such Boards at which they 
shall be present. 
5. The Council shall not after the first day of January, 1871, 
appoint any person who has attained the age of sixty-five 
years at the time of the appointment to be an Examiner, 
unless such person shall be the President or the Vice- 
President of the Society. 
6. No person shall be appointed an Examiner who at the time 
of appointment is, or who during one year prior to the 
time of appointment has been, a Member of the Council, 
other than the President or Vice-President; and the 
election of any Examiner to be a Member -of the Council 
shall vacate his appointment as an Examiner. 
7. The Board of Examiners for England and Wales shall 
■consist of not more than twelve nor less than eight Phar¬ 
maceutical Chemists, exclusive of the President and Vice- 
President of the Society. The Board of Examiners for 
Scotland shall consist of not more than eight nor less than 
four Pharmaceutical Chemists, exclusive of the President 
and Vice-President of the Society. The Council of the 
Society may from time to time appoint professors of 
■science to assist either of the Boards of Examiners at any 
of their examinations. Eight members of the Board of 
Examiners for England and Wales, and four members of 
the Board of Examiners for Scotland, exclusive in each 
case of assistant professors, shall constitute a quorum. 
8. The Council of the Society shall from time to time supply 
any vacancy in the office of examiner, and may remove 
any member of the Board of Examiners, and substitute 
another person in his place, and may also from time to 
time appoint a Special Examiner, or Special Examiners, 
to conduct any examination as to knowledge of the Latin 
language. 
9. As the Act, 1868, contains a provision that all such per¬ 
sons as have from time to time been appointed to conduct 
